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National Gallery marks 200th birthday with 14th-century religious art

LONDON (DPA) : Religious artworks by 14th-century painters are being brought together for the National Gallery’s 200th-anniversary celebration in London.

“Siena: The Rise Of Painting 1300-1350,” which also celebrates the earliest pictures in its collection, will display triptychs and images of crucifixions created in the Italian city, the country and across Europe at the London Museum.

One ensemble, a double-sided altarpiece known as the “Maesta,” was broken up in the 18th century. It was painted by Sienese artist Duccio di Buoninsegna for the city’s cathedral.

The Trafalgar Square museum owns three panels, which will be shown alongside other paintings depicting Christ’s life.

These include “Christ And The Woman Of Samaria” from the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum in Madrid and “The Calling Of The Apostles Peter And Andrew” from the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

The artist’s triptychs “The Virgin And Child With Saint Dominic and Saint Aurea” and “Patriarchs And Prophets,” housed at the National Gallery and “The Crucifixion;” “The Redeemer With Angels,” “Saint Nicholas,” “Saint Clement,” kept the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, are thought to have been made as a pair thanks to matching decorations on their exterior wings.

A visitor looks at the painting
A visitor looks at the painting “San Michele Arcangelo,” one panel of the Augustinian Polyptych created by Piero Della Francesca, on display during the exhibition “Piero della Francesca and the reunited Augustinian Polyptych” at the Poldi Pezzoli Museum in Milan, Italy, March 19, 2024. (EPA Photo)

They will be brought back together at the exhibition.

Another reunion will be the “Orsini Polyptych” by Sienese artist Simone Martini. Martini was a pupil of di Buoninsegna and is believed to have created the piece for Cardinal Napoleone Orsini, a member of one of medieval and Renaissance Italy’s leading families.

The panels of “Christ Bearing The Cross,” “Crucifixion,” “Descent From The Cross and Entombment,” “The Archangel Gabriel” and “The Virgin Of The Annunciation” are currently looked after at the Louvre in Paris, the Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp and the Gemaldegalerie in Berlin.

Paintings by Pietro Lorenzetti and his brother Ambrogio Lorenzetti will also be shown along with metalwork, enamel, gilded glass, wood, marble, and manuscript illumination by Sienese artists and a selection of works such as ivories, enamels, illuminated manuscripts, rugs and silks from other places.

“Siena: The Rise of Painting 1300-1350” will open in spring 2025.